AI meets democracy on Perplexity AI's new Election Information Hub

AI conversational search engine Perplexity wants to help keep you updated about the election this year and has introduced a new Election Information Hub designed to do just that. The hub uses Perplexity's AI tools to bring real-time information to visitors.

Perplexity sees the hub as a seed for future voter awareness and participation, one that has accessible information on candidates, ballot measures, and results and that can prove AI won't fall into hallucinations around important, fast-changing subjects like elections.

You can find all kinds of election-related information on the platform. Perplexity limits its sources to reputable providers like The Associated Press and Democracy Works to ensure there aren't any wrong or made-up answers from the AI about the election and various other votes. The hub includes data on state and federal elections as well as propositions on the ballot in different states. Real-time tracking ensures that users are informed as things change.

"We want to do our part to support an informed electorate, so we’ve built the election hub on Perplexity’s answer engine: an entry point for understanding key issues, voting intelligently, and tracking election results," Perplexity explained in an announcement. "We answer your election-related questions using a curated set of the most trustworthy and informative sources."

AI election advice

The hub is fairly easy to use, especially if you've played with Perplexity and its AI search engine. It launched only a few days ago, limiting the utility of information on voting requirements, polling places and times, and related details. But, those elements will be a boon to users in future votes.

The AI also helps summarize ballot measures and candidate profiles, including official policy positions and who has endorsed the measures and candidates. That's a good resource when there's a cavalcade of information for each election. You can use the hub without a subscription to Perplexity's premium services, another point of accessibility Perplexity hopes will encourage people to try out the hub. And, it doesn't seem to bring in sponsored follow-up questions, which makes sense as it would run somewhat counter to the non-partisan, informative tone Perplexity is going for.

"We want to make it as simple as possible to receive trusted, easy-to-understand information to inform your voting decisions. For each response, you can view the sources that informed an answer, allowing you to dive deeper and verify referenced materials," Perplexity wrote. "Whether you're seeking to understand complex ballot measures, verify candidate positions, or simply find your polling place, Perplexity is here to support your civic engagement."

You might also like...

How It works

Search Crack for

Latest IT News

Dec 14
Character.AI adds new safety features for AI chatbots.
Dec 14
OpenAI adds Projects feature to ChatGPT.
Dec 13
New Phi-4 AI from Microsoft is lightweight but great at math and language processing
Dec 13
Samsung and Google's VR headset could be a mistake, but the glasses sound sweet.
Dec 13
Microsoft’s controversial Recall feature stumbles yet again: this time it’s been caught storing users’ credit card and social security information.
Dec 13
Microsoft is removing Windows 11’s “Suggested Actions” feature, replacing it with AI-driven “Click to Do” for newer Copilot+ PCs
Dec 13
Apple Intelligence comes to iWork as Apple updates Keynote, Pages, and Numbers with AI features.

Latest cracks